Comment aw sum (Score 2) 430
Now when I say my peak rates are less than 25% of broadband speed, maybe I can get some sympathy
Now when I say my peak rates are less than 25% of broadband speed, maybe I can get some sympathy
The spare platter strategy does nothing to reduce this failure mode. In fact, all modern disks already have spare space for bad block relocation.
Including pretty much everything with an onboard controller. "Modern" is understating the case.
If I were expecting an array to last a long time without being touched, I would expect it to have a whole bunch of spares that never even got heated up until they were needed, just sat there in the box enjoying living in a relatively temperature-constant environment. Sure, there's fluctuations, but they'll all be within the operating temperature range of the drives.
It's not all about you. I'm talking about
...so it's all about you?
A cellphone phone is a thing and it's usually connected to the internet. An internet of things no less.
I'm pretty sure that you know that these "things" are things which have a purpose other than being a computer, which a cellphone doesn't. (POTS being obsolete today, though still useful)
Or maybe people just used the term "embedded" previously and are now using "IoT" because of it being fashionable
Many of those embedded systems don't even have network interfaces, let alone are capable of participating on an internetwork using TCP/IP.
Smart, but if we're going to substitute the jobs of editors with Google then maybe we should go all out. Instead we're paying useless editors
Who is this 'we'? I run adblock (and I'm eligible to have ads disabled anyway) and I don't recall ever cutting Slashdot a check.
As if "the internet of things" is somehow more special than the idea that as the tech gets cheaper, more and more things will connect to wireless networks.
Yes, the idea is that this time has come. It hasn't, but believing that it has will usher it in as the increased demand produces the parts we need to actually do the thing. In the meantime a lot of startups will rise and asplode.
c'mon man, don't mess it up
it's called the IoT of Things
Google is working on enabling OpenPGP-encrypted e-mail for Gmail with a Chrome extension: https://github.com/google/end-...
Or you can have it on Firefox right now with enigmail. Or well, you could. Maybe it doesn't work any more. I had nobody to exchange encrypted email with, so I no longer have it installed.
there isn't an IoTa of awareness
insane != abstract
you don't get to redefine words as their opposite meaning and expect to sound logically coherent
"i'm going to redefine 'wet' as 'dry' and continue talking about climatology and expect people to still take me seriously..."
okay, crackpot
i'm not willing to entertain the mental gymnastics whereby moderation is defined as an extreme
you're nuts dude
what have you "won" exactly?
You "win" Turkish citizens annoyed with their government -- a win in the only venue likely to be able to create change there.
i stopped reading there
how did that work with cuba? iran? north korea? china?
what you're asking for is massacred citizens
iran for example
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2...
no matter how many intelligent, forward thinking students you have agitating in the cities, the government just calls up busloads of basiji thugs from the countryside and cracks skulls until change seekers shut up in fear. or worse:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/D...
slow stead engagement is what really works
reactionary inflexibility simply means no change at all
welcome to reality
this is you:
http://www.politico.com/story/...
pragmatism, flexibility, realism, compromise always wins
inflexible ideological dogmatism is how you lose and are ignored
well yeah, by definition a rock star is very rare
so if you want a rockstar working for you, you better be ready to shell out big money or provide truly extraordinary perks
you can't just expect or demand rock star status from average or even above average programmers. you can't mold people's personalities like their technical proficiency. i suppose there does exist stress mitigating strategies someone can consciously adapt. but from the rock star i met, it is a sort of chilly immunity to even the concept of stress that is quite awesome to behold
that's why i quoted eisenhower
because when i met such a person, i immediately thought of someone functioning under the stresses of extreme combat. i thought of this person on the eastern front in wwii. what it would take to survive *real* stress, because stress in programming, while real, taken in perspective to something like fields of combat, is a joke
i always wondered if this person had indeed been in such an extreme stressful environment, like war. a sort of "once i've seen that, none of this shit impresses me." because indeed, nothing seemed to impress him. you could scream in his face and he would react the same as if you were casually discussing gardening. nothing phased the dude
I haven't met or heard of anybody who is a "rock star" by your criterion. The closest I met was a person of very resilient personality, capable of working hard and steady through great stress, and who had an average level of talent. Not a bad person to have as part of a team, but in no way a rock star.
i have met a person with that stress proof personality, and above average talent. they exist. those are the rockstars
The hardest part of climbing the ladder of success is getting through the crowd at the bottom.